For bio go to my ProleWiki
@sparkingcircuit:genzedong.xyz
Audio version here (from DPRK POV):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OkdabsaEVLU
Your welcome!
Thank you for your response! Yes, it is true that the States were limited to the east coast initially, though it took so little time to expand westward that I opted to omit it for conciseness of the text. However, as this did play a vital role in their expansionary mentality, and the brutality that the states would show to their fellow human beings, I realize now I should not have excluded it. Especially given how they were constantly rewarded for their effort to eradicate the natives with land, slaves, and resources.
Didn’t capitalism start 300-400 years ago? If I remember correctly, capitalism was born of the imperial nations of Europe (primarily Great Britain, France, and Spain), as private capital, now unrestricted from the guilds as under feudalism, expanded for increased control of their respective markets.
The United States, started only slightly after the major imperial powers of its day. In addition, it’s geography blessed it with weak neighbors to the north and south, and fish to the east and west, allowing it to develop almost entirely unhindered from the risk of war destroying it’s means of production. Furthermore, property rights were enshrined in its very constitution from start due to its status as one of the world’s first a bourgeois democracies (widely believed to be the ideal circumstances for the development of capitalism). As such, the United States had one of the most mature capitalist economies in the world by this point. Even at this point it’s form of capitalism is probably more mature than many capitalist nations in the third world are currently.
In all likelihood, the course of capitalism in the United States was reversed somewhat by a combination of anti-monopolistic legislation, an end to its pre-worldwar isolationist policies, and the introduction of new markets in the world economy due to need for many nations to rebuild after World War Two. As such, I think it reasonable to call this a consequence of a 1940s late stage capitalist economy.
Please note: The United States did not start out spanning the entire continent, but rather got their though roughly a century of brutal westward expansion and genocide. I apologize for my omission of this information.
Strange… I’ve never had a problem with it. I use the extended support release of Firefox, maybe it works better on some versions of the supported browsers than others?
To get around the paywall, the Bypass Paywall extension (Firefox and Chrome) works great!
For those without subscriptions to any of these news sites, I recommend the Bypass Paywalls extension. Works on Chromium and Firefox.
Upon testing it on Ungoogled Chromium on another device (Version 114.0.5735.198 (Official Build, ungoogled-chromium) (64-bit)), it still doesn’t load the image… As such, I now think the browser is an unlikely candidate.
Name: Firefox
Version: 102.13.0esr
Build ID: 20230629172511
Distribution ID:
User Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:102.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/102.0
OS: Linux 6.1.0-10-amd64 #1 SMP PREEMPT_DYNAMIC Debian 6.1.37-1 (2023-07-03)
OS Theme: Adwaita-dark / Adwaita
Multiprocess Windows: 1/1
Fission Windows: 1/1 Enabled by default
Remote Processes: 11
Safe Mode: false
Same here, perhaps one of Lemmygrad’s recent updates?
What web browser do you use? I’m currently using Firefox-ESR 102.13.0. Maybe it’s our web browser…
The image "https://lemmygrad.ml/pictrs/image/068bf657-4d4a-4808-9eb3-0b670521dd8a.jpeg?format=webp&thumbnail=256" cannot be displayed because it contains errors.
I think your image has been corrupted.
That’s great! I’m glad it went for you comrade. Good luck with the rest of your family.
“Your labour is appreciated, fellow proletariats.”
China’s take on the Japanese government’s handling of the situation, largely due to some of the isotopes they haven’t filtered out. Particularly the strontium, iodine, and carbon variants. These have leaked into said wastewater due to the meltdown in several of Fukushima’s reactors.